Affiliation:
1. Klinički centar Kragujevac, Kragujevac
2. Medicinski centar Gornji Milanovac, Gornji Milanovac
Abstract
Introduction. Psychiatric symptoms are not rare manifestations of brain
tumors. Brain tumors presented by symptoms of raised intracranial pressure,
focal neurological signs, or convulsions are usually first seen by the
neurologist or less frequently by the neurosurgeon in routine diagnostic
procedures. On the other hand, when psychiatric symptoms are the first
manifestation in ?neurologically silent? brain tumors, the patients are sent
to the psychiatrist for the treatment of psychiatric symptoms and brain
tumors are left misdiagnosed for a long period of time. Case Report. We
presented three patients with the diagnosed brain tumor where psychiatrist
had been the first specialist to be consulted. In all three cases
neurological examination was generally unremarkable with no focal signs or
features of raised intracranial pressure. CT scan demonstrated right insular
tumor in a female patient with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD); right
parietal temporal tumor in a patient with delusions and depression and left
frontal tumor in a patient with history of alcohol dependency. Conclusion.
Psychiatric symptoms/disorders in patients with brain tumors are not specific
enough and can have the same clinical presentation as the genuine psychiatric
disorder. Therefore, we emphasize the consideration of neuroimaging in
patients with abrupt beginning of psychiatric symptoms, in those with a
change in mental status, or when headaches suddenly appear or in cases of
treatment resistant psychiatric disorders regardless the lack of neurological
symptoms.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
Pharmacology (medical),General Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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